Nicely promoted scavenger hunt event at the NYPL


This is how you promote information literacy. That game playing thing you've been reading about.

I don't know much about how it will work, but I do know that it has been developed by the rather exciting Jane McGonigal.

It's quite exciting in a popcorn-trailer sort of a way. I will be playing along and thinking about the immense combined social impact of games and libraries. What is research itself – if not a game?

Find the Future

We Make Books: outcomes, lessons and successes

Wemakebooks-sm

(Peter Please' s books in forground; Andy Cox is talking to Sarah Trigg, while Chris Robinson, Otto Dettmer and Ros Blackmore are in background. Not pictured here – Caroline Heaton)

Many thanks to all who came to Bristol Central Library on the 8th March to take part in ‘We Make Books’. This was a mini-book fair taking place right in the heart of the library itself, and I think it might serve as a bit of a pilot project for other fairs at some point in the future.

While everyone who took part seems to have had a pretty good experience, in particular saying that it was a good chance for them to meet with their bookmaking peers, there were a couple of areas to try to make bigger and better.

Firstly, although the library is comparatively busy on Saturdays, it’s not clear that we got many extra visitors who were looking just to see the show. Although I had posters and press releases and social media stuff out about this, it seems that it’s going to take longer saturation to get that extra bit of audience. One thought that came up was that I need to make more use of the people attending to do their own marketing – set up poster packs for them to distribute, etc. I must admit that delegation has never been a strong suit for me. One problem standing in the way here, though, was that most of the things I was trying to arrange depended on a sort of chain reaction of authorisation, so it would sometimes take some time for quite simple things to be agreed upon. I need to learn to dig my heels in and get early authorisation for things to give me the lead in time that I really need. This ended up affecting both the length of time that advertising was available to the public to see, and the confirmation of bookings etc, so that I could have dependably given out material to other people to distribute. In both cases, just getting the confirmation I need to act, earlier, is key.

Secondly, it’d be great to just make the thing a bit bigger. We’re never going to have a really big exhibition space, but we ended up discussing several options that are worth thinkng about — what if it were possible to do without the cafe tables for the day? What if we could have the fair in several parts of the library at once? (Eg cafe, reference corridor, lobby…?) There are of course objections to these ideas, but maybe, thinking the unthinkable, the might be ways around some of them?

In any case I think that the seed of a bigger fair has been planted. I’d really like to thank the people who took tables that day, and the people who came round and had good look at what was there. In particular I’d like to say thank you to Peter Please and Sarah Trigg, who kindly donated books to the library. Your gifts will become part of our small-but-wildly-fascinating private press collection.

Tomorrow sees Kate Holland from the Society of Designer Bookbinders give a class in the library’s conference room, a lovely 1908 revenant next door to the equally striking Reading Room.

Free Bookbinding Workshop

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“bookbinding for beginners
Friday, 18th March
Bristol Central Library
11-4 (with lunch break)
 
Free (donation requested but not essential)
An afternoon workshop for adults teaching a simple clothbound hardback book technique with the Society of Designer Bookbinders’ Kate Holland.
 
Learn how to make a hardwearing and attractive book in the Central Library. Places are free but a voluntary donation towards the cost of materials would be welcomed.
 
Booking is essential. Please contact andrew.eason AT bristol.gov.uk , 0117 903 7202 to book your place”

Review of Nicholas Carr’s The Shallows in the London Review of Books

Review of Nicholas Carr's The Shallows (reviewer, Jim Holt) in the London Review of Books: ‘The net’s interactivity gives us powerful new tools for finding information, expressing ourselves and conversing with others,’ but it ‘also turns us into lab rats constantly pressing levers to get tiny pellets of social or intellectual nourishment.’

A thoughtful review of points brought up by Carr- reading's slow immersion in the medium, the brain's flexibility, the unpredictable relationships between memory and creativity, etc.

Carr (the erstwhile author of 'is Google Making us Stupid') argues that internet technologies have a deleterious effect on us because, as we ascribe more of our memory and recall to the web, the kinds of unconscious reworking of material that informs creativity when we remember things ourselves goes underfed. We end up making connections only at the conscious point of recall.

I'm not sure that I agree with Carr but he makes an interesting point, one that jibes with concerns about information literacy. There's nothing wrong with search being easy, but when it comes at the cost of reflection, we are right to feel concern.

Incidentally, I think that the same students who alarm their tutors by googling everything may not always simply be lazy, but are employing the most apt strategy for garnering information quickly. Although tutors may set up difficulties for this process by requiring certain sorts of outcomes (so many journals, so many monographs, evidence of reflection) I wonder, (in a fairly uninformed way) whether the anxieties of modern pedagogy are getting in its own way. There's no time for reflection because of all the hoops one jumps through. If I am presented with a modest number of set texts I will probably read around them. And I will deserve merit for doing so, in contrast to those who will not. When I have too much to read, too much to find, I will use every dirty trick of search I have learned in over a decade of library service. I will not only use Google for initial leads, I will use 'find' on pages, and Google books and Amazon act as comprehensive indexes to books I hold in my hand to help me skim for relevant passages.

I would agree that I would be impoverished in comparison to someone who had the time to read and inwardly digest the full texts, but one is forced to these strategies by the demands placed on readers today, not least of which is that of time spent at work. When I read Tara Brabazon noting the connection between greater number of hours spent making an income (to pay for one's education) and the corresponding likelihood of not doing as well academically, I agreed wholeheartedly. But I don't blame the student for working. They have to. It will be rightly said that those who wish to achieve will put the extra hours in, but there are after all only so many hours in the day. And if the Black Ops of illegally-mediated search can help the student get to the material quicker, isn't that a useful skill?

I repeat, though, that I would agree that the price to be paid in lack of reflection, and in opportunities to better acquaint oneself with skills in assessing the quality of resources, is a high one. These skills require time more than anything though. If the time is given, it will be filled, either with laziness or with scholarship. Perhaps it is for the student to decide which.

October

An image I’ve produced for a book art exchange project organised by Mikhail Pogarsky and Sarah Bodman, based on the months of the year. Each artist involved will make 2 copies of a print based on ‘their’ which will be bound into books and exhibited in the UK and Russia. I got October.

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Instant Books (new date)

A new date for Instant Books: Saturday 16th April. 2.30pm-4pm. (I’m teaching a simple class in bookbinding for kids. Just a few quick,
fun, simple little bindings. I do hope that some people can make it.)

Instant Books!

I'm teaching a simple class in bookbinding for kids. Just a few quick, fun, simple little bindings. I do hope that some people can make it. I realise that Thursday afternoon isn't the ideal time for everyone. I didn't specifically plan it to come out that way! Anyway the people at the children's library have been super good about publicising it, so fingers crossed.

Artists’ Publications Fair at Bristol Central Library: “We Make Books”

I've just finished putting together the poster for the artists' publications event I've been organising for the Central Library. Sarah Trigg of Trigger Editions and Otto of Ottobooks were kind enough to provide images for the poster.

It'll be a fairly cosy affair in the library's café area, starting around 10am on Saturday 12th March (or earlier, if the stallholders are morning people!). I'm hoping for a nice big Saturday crowd at the library to help them shift some books. I've been working on a Mail Art exhibition to run upstairs in the Reference Library at the same time -more on that soon.